snowseau wrote a review...
I finished this book in one sitting which doesn't happen very often. The characters and their relationships all felt so real, as if we were reading a true story. None of the characters were perfect, but they also weren't trying to be. They were all people being messy and living their lives. I'm usually not the biggest fan of dual timelines in books, but I actually really enjoyed it here and found it enhanced the story. I did find Shiloh annoying when she was a teenager, but as the story progressed and I saw her life after, she grew on me.
snowseau finished a book

Slow Dance
Rainbow Rowell
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
So I've always been a print media girlie, but recently started reading ebooks more often and I'm really enjoying it. I've been looking into subscription services and just got a trial of Everand, but I don't really get what the point is? I feel like maybe I'm missing something but ÂŁ10.99 on the lowest tier (UK prices) for one ebook/audiobook a month, plus access to a pretty not great selection of 'unlimited' titles feels kinda steep?
The other tiers seem a bit more worth it, but idk that I want to be paying that much for digital media each month. From what I can tell, they used to offer a more flat-rate unlimited access model, which makes way more sense to me. I just can't justify this kind of expense for something I don't even own since, at least with Everand, you lose access once your subscription has lapsed.
Do you guys regularly use these services (Everand, Kindle Unlimited, Audible, Storytel etc) and if so, do you find they're worth it? The need and the demand for digital reading services is definitely there, especially for those with access needs, but surely there's a better way of doing it?
snowseau started reading...

Slow Dance
Rainbow Rowell
snowseau DNF'd a book

Throne of the Fallen (Princes of Sin, #1)
Kerri Maniscalco
snowseau started reading...

Throne of the Fallen (Princes of Sin, #1)
Kerri Maniscalco
snowseau wrote a review...
I found this last volume of the series to be much better done than the previous two. You can definitely see that the author finally knows exactly where she wants these characters to go and what will happen.
To rate the full series, I'd probably give it 3.5 stars. It would have been higher, but I'm unable to see past the shortcomings of volume one. It's a shame because it really is a good story, but if I picked this up for myself and not for book club, the first third would have put me off it altogether. About halfway through the series, things started actually intriguing me, and I was able to read more than just one chapter at a time. I feel like most things were pretty tied up by the end, but it also seemed like things were resolved a bit too easily relative to the stakes.
snowseau finished a book

Hooky Volume 3
MĂriam Bonastre Tur
snowseau commented on snowseau's update
snowseau is interested in reading...

The Geographer's Map to Romance (Love's Academic, #2)
India Holton
snowseau is interested in reading...

The Sign of Four (Sherlock Holmes, #2)
Arthur Conan Doyle
snowseau is interested in reading...

The Geographer's Map to Romance (Love's Academic, #2)
India Holton
snowseau TBR'd a book

Son of a Witch (The Wicked Years, #2)
Gregory Maguire
snowseau is interested in reading...

Castle in the Air (Howl's Moving Castle, #2)
Diana Wynne Jones
snowseau is interested in reading...

The Lost World (Jurassic Park, #2)
Michael Crichton
snowseau started reading...

Hooky Volume 3
MĂriam Bonastre Tur
snowseau wrote a review...
This volume was so much better than the first one. Although I was still distracted by errors in the writing, it was less noticeable because the story really picked up. The pacing was much better, and it all actually felt like one cohesive story instead of a bunch of loosely related chapters crammed together.